A New Standard in Case Report Journals

Welcome to Convergent Points, an East-West Case Report Journal. Bridging traditional knowledge and scientific evidence, Convergent Points gathers and shares rigorous case reports from real-world acupuncture and Eastern Asian medical practices. If you’re interested in joining an interdisciplinary team setting a new standard for case reports and practice-based research, let us know!

Authors   Readers   Librarians


For more information, read About the Journal and our Editorial Board page. If you would like to submit a case report, wonderful! Look through the Information for Authors and contact us if you have any questions. Also, please Register to receive an automatic update when we release a new edition; the journal is free, and your data is private. Would you like to support this work in other ways, such as by sponsoring, peer-reviewing, grant writing, donating, spreading the word, or something else? Email editor@convergentpoints.com.

Journal Summary

Convergent Points: An East-West Case Report Journal is an online, open access, peer reviewed publication dedicated to describing practices and outcomes within acupuncture and traditional Asian medicine. Individuated medical care is complex, and case reports best capture the diversity of integrative acupuncture treatments, as well as the multifactorial nature of patient experience. Case reports may also contribute to scientific understanding. The case reports in this journal adhere to rigorous guidelines in order to provide replicability and means of analysis, as well as education and inspiration across medical disciplines.

Aims

  • To create an ongoing library reference for high quality, scientifically rigorous AEAM case reports.  
  • To inspire practitioners to collect data that accurately reflect the scope of AEAM, as well as data that reflect social and environmental factors affecting patients' health.
  • To provide a platform for emerging scholars and leaders in the field of AEAM to share knowledge and experience.  

Publication Frequency:

  • October 15th & February 15th publication
  • Two submission deadlines: August 1st, December 1st

Learn more:

Interested in the benefits of case report research, or how to submit a case report for consideration?

About Case Reports       Submission Guidelines



Current Issue

Vol. 5 No. 1 (2026): Finding Paths Through Clinical Gaps
					View Vol. 5 No. 1 (2026): Finding Paths Through Clinical Gaps

Modern biomedicine can be powerful and precise. Yet there remain clinical gaps—conditions where interventions are limited, or where structural bias shapes outcomes. The case reports in this issue of Convergent Points explore what happens when acupuncture and East Asian medicine provide thoughtful (sometimes brilliant) adjunctive responses to unmet need.

Sharonne O’Shea presents a multimodal approach to Morton’s neuroma, nerve impairment for which treatment options are often insufficient and surgery remains a common endpoint. Through layered use of far-infrared laser, electroacupuncture, and gua sha, this case demonstrates functional gains and pain reduction for a disorder which frequently progresses despite standard care.

Kyung Shin and Catherine Vasco document adjunctive acupuncture and warming-needle moxibustion in a child with seasonal hyperacute panuveitis (SHAPU), a rare eye condition endemic to Nepal. In the context of urgent surgical intervention and risk of blindness, this report explores whether traditional techniques may influence recovery in an acute medical emergency.

Rebecca Mar Young and Brigitte Linder describe acupuncture in the management of severe childhood gratification syndrome, a frequently misdiagnosed pediatric presentation associated with significant family distress. Extraordinary and luo vessel treatment offers a means of addressing early regulatory disturbance where biomedical guidance is largely limited to reassurance.

Finally, Rhys May presents acupuncture with bleeding techniques and autogenic breathing during a sickle cell pain crisis. In a genetic disorder characterized by debilitating pain, high rates of opioid reliance, and well-documented health care inequities, this case illustrates how integrative care may reduce symptom burden and bolster patient agency.

Together, these reports explore acupuncture’s role in conditions where perstistent or escalating suffering compells people to seek additional care. The clinical gaps are real. Well-documented case reporting is one way to examine how integrative medicine may help our patients move through them.

-Kathleen Lumiere, Editor

 

Published: 2026-02-15
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